Heaven forbid we celebrate Mass with a community of friends instead of a group of strangers.
There are no strangers in the Universal Church, only people we haven’t met yet.
If you have such a problem that holding hands during the Lord’s Prayer with the person reaching out to you, that you decided to not attend Mass, then you’ve got a problem in your spiritual formation.
Ask yourself, would Jesus refuse ?
Jim
Well, there is a chance He might say, “Friend, who appointed me as your judge and arbitrator?”
What’s in the heart is the issue.
If a kind person reaches out to hold your hand in prayer, how can you refuse and not insult that person ?
I just don’t get it
You just nicely indicate, “I can see your offer is kindly meant, but no thank you.” There is occasionally someone who insists, but honestly this isn’t something most people get that cranked up about.
And wrangling over this issue distracts and divides Christians from much bigger issues.
So don’t wrangle! No problem!
Mass isn’t an individual form of worship, but communal
Salvation as never individualistic, but socialistic, per Pope Benedict XVI.
OK, but nobody ever tried to grab Pope Benedict’s hand during the Our Father, true?
If the clergy do not see a reason to do this, why would anyone else?
There is nothing wrong with offering, at least I haven’t seen any posture proscribed in the rubrics, but it is necessary to respect those who don’t care to hold hands. It isn’t in the rubrics. They don’t have to. Mutual respect and refraining from judging anyone one way or the other is generous enough.
I’ve seen people reach over and grab another person’s hand. Had it happen to me once, even though my hands were already folded together.
This beyond the pale. I wouldn’t get in an arm-wrestling match over it, but it is not kosher to force someone else into a particular posture that IS in the rubrics, let alone one that is not.
You’re misunderstanding what I wrote.
When a hand is offered to me, I will not reject it
Hope this helps
I don’t, either, but I don’t think it a cause for insult when someone does. That’s not to say someone won’t take offense or decide to get their feelings hurt, but they really don’t have a leg to stand on.
Read the entire Encyclical, it explains more about salvation being a social reality rather than just an event for the individual
Again, if Pope Benedict had wanted hand-holding during the Our Father to be considered de rigueur, he could have put it in the rubrics. He did not. There is a reason for that.